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Inspiration Friday 2016: Thousand Sons (until 1/13)


Kierdale

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I thank you for your entries in Inspirational Friday: The Primordial Annihilator versus the Sons of Sanguinius over the last week.

I was worried we’d only have two...and then two more came in the final hours! And I'm very happy to see an entry from a member of the Blood Angels forum. Many thanks, Chaplain Gunzhard (I love that name!).

I’ll admit I haven’t had chance to read them yet, but look forward to doing so over the next week.

I hereby close that topic for the purposes of rewards (though as always if you have more entries on the topic please post them at any time, with a suitable note in the post’s title).

Here begins our twenty Eighth challenge of Inspirational Friday 2016:

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Bug

From the hive fleets of the Great Devourer through desperate fighting in the crampt confines of space hulks to the insidious cults of genestealers and their hybrids, these xenos are a great threat to not only the Imperium but also the other races of the galaxy, and to the schemes of renegades and devotees of the Chaos Gods.

This week I would have you tell us of clashes between the forces of Chaos...and the bugs.

Inspirational Friday: The Primordial Annihilator versus the Bug runs until the 30th of September.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: MyD4arkPassenger.

To the chosen victor: step forward and claim your Octed Amulet:

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This week is yet another `Chaos versus...` but next week I have the first of a new series for us, and soon after we’ll be returning for the third part of the Campaign series...

Cult

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Eliza Two Tongues adjusted the helm, shouting at her crew to trim the sails in order to catch the waxing Change Wind. The Great Mutator had blessed their journey so far, but in her seven years as Captain she had learned better than to depend on their mercurial patron. Better to make the most of what she had in the moment than play it safe, to die on the slashing rocks instead of sacrificing territory for being last to the Moot.

 

It took two more weeks for the Cult of the True Flesh to reach the Godswell. Three days of strong winds followed by eleven of the slaves sweating over oars and flippers. As always, some were lost, starving after their faces fused unfeadably into the ship or dying from overwork, but no more than was usual or proper. They would be second to arrive.
 
Eliza looked at the Brass Host with disgust, a long line of smoking machines clanking along the thin mountain pass, a cloud of oily black drifting behind them in the Plague Wind as the climbed up to the Godswell. They put faith in iron, and brass, and lead, abandoning the truth found in Flesh and treating their Changed as expendable fodder, useful distractions, but not blessed by the the Gods. Eliza smiled as she remembered who came with them; the Children would show the truth of the Change, that death was no certainty, and that the form of the gods was not for the Brass Host to say!
 
“Off the ships! Time to show these land lubbers what a real warrior looks like!” With that, the Cult of the True Flesh streamed from their ships, uttering prayers to the Changer and making quick time over land, scouts on long legs or many ranging far ahead to check for any traps set by jealous lesser cults. The slower and stronger kept up the rear, precious cases of stolen goods and deepwhale fat were protected in the center by ranks of pirates eager to prove their worth. Those left at the ships turned to take them up coast to a guarded cove, where the slaves could be let to wander without escape and any attacks would be well foreseen.
 
The journey to the Godswell took two more days, and Eliza could see the other cults of the world lining up below them. The Fireeaters carried a burning witch, the ash sticking in Eliza’s double throats and making her eyes water. The Pestilent Few’s scent ranged as far as the sounds of their bone chimes. The Listeners marched in silence, but could be known by the strings of ears they wore over their robes. Scarcatchers whooped and hollered, the biting wind on their tattooed naked flesh only bringing them greater joy. Dozens of the greater cults, and hundreds of lessers and offshoots all made their way to the Godswell over the following weeks. Some hoped only to trade enough to continue living, but others sought far more, hoping for victory in the contests of policy for the next year, or perhaps even to take the Bitter Crown, and gain direct communication with the Angels of their Gods.
 
When the last cult arrived, The Hunted, one of their number was divided amongst those who had arrived before them, and the Night Laughter, who received the largest bone fragment, chose to receive one hundred slaves rather than take any land. The summit fires were lit and the highest of each cult met at the summit, above the clouds, yet still below the swirling colours of the Godswell high above the sky. The moot had begun.
 
As was custom, each cult spoke first in the order they had arrived. Eliza waited however to bring up the greatest grievance, the waste of the Flesh Changed, until others had spoken their first words, instead laying claim to the Isle of Nika, a dispute with the Scarcatchers that had gone for months and lost many on both sides. She smiled when the Scarcatchers spoke out of turn, knowing such an action here would make their claim forfeit. When the Listeners turn came, Eliza also spoke for them, as the two tribes had long been allies, both being servants of the Master of Magic. Night after night the moot continued, though Eliza spent most of her days seeking personal alliances with cult leaders across the mountain top, making promises she had little intention to keep to keep in full. Each night the cult leaders spoke again, voting for punishments and trade agreements.
 
On the last day, Eliza delivered on one promise she had made for months prior to the moot. The displaying of a great wonder her tribe had been gifted with. When all those who had sworn for her were at the widest of the circle of gathered leaders, and when the fires dimmed low, she had one hundred hooded figures of the Cult of the True Flesh walk into their center. The light of the Godswell stretched and twisted their forms as Eliza spoke.
 
“Today we are gathered, not to bicker, but to witness a miracle. Long have many of you sat in fear of the Changed, calling them beasts and spawn, and decrying their existence among your ranks. You sat there in judgment, believing such beings to be cursed by the Gods for failures both public and private. Others of you understood that these were blessed warriors, laden heavily with the boons of our salvation. But even you looked upon their existence as bittersweet, fleeting, a candle burning at every end. But I am hear to show you that the Changed are so much more. They can be born from us, perfect, whole, and stable. Behold our Children!”
 
In that moment, the hundred warriors of the True Flesh tore through their robes, claws and talons spearing out into those who Eliza knew would never accept them. Screams of pain and war rent the air as the outer circle of allies fired upon the inner commanders, a thousand different weapons from a hundred different tribes. But the numbers were greatly unbalanced, and the Children began to fall, even as they took dozens with each of them. Eliza and her command drew their sabres and rushed in, the top of the mountain quickly became a bloodbath all lit by the eerie glow of the Godswell above.
 
It was not until Eliza saw her own beloved son fall, torn in two by the cannonball of a Blood Host construct, that the battle turned. All her love turned instantly to hate, and she let the energy of the gods flow through her. The Godswell dimmed as psychic energy drove her body forward, and sent screaming horrors into the minds of those around her. More a raging beast than even the fiendish clawed children, Eliza carved a path through the attendants to the downward path. The tribes scattered, most realizing a fight now would be madness.
 
Eliza hatred drove her faster than all, the Cult of the True Flesh found their way to the ships even before some tribes had heard of the betrayal. Rarely before had the sanctity of the moot been so disrupted. War unseen for generations would come now, and Eliza would have to mourn later. Now was the time for vengeance. The Angels of the Void had called to her, and she would see to it that this world was ready to receive them. The Changer had spoken through its emissary, and none could refuse the will of the Gods.
 
eh, not my best work, but whatever, I liked the concept well enough, and it's been a while

Salvage

 

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Again apologies.

 

I'll preface by saying all of these tales were fantastic this week and I enjoyed them all. 

 

For Carrack's story I really enjoyed the description of the Red Thirst taking hold of the commander and his men.  I loved how you highlighted it as his shame and a taboo amongst the marines to even speak of it.  Plus the fear of the servants and the holding of garlic was a great touch.  The battle between your Lord and the Chapter master was well written from the viewpoint of an onlooker and a potential rival, highlighting the combi melta strike as a cheap victory was a selling point in his traitorous thoughts about his lord.  Again your description of the Black Rage was wonderful, it felt like a fluid transition into madness.

 
In Chaplain Gunzhard's I felt the excitement and introspection of a neophyte in the scout squadrons.  His reactions to his brothers dying felt like an astartes should react, somber reflection on their duty being done to the best of their ability.  I really liked your description of the primary target, I created a perfect mental image of this fleshy crate that seemed alive.  I think though my favorite part was the veteran sergeant looking at the neophyte and smiling before their charge with all of the Death Company right behind them.  It gave me all the best feelings of watching Aragorn charge the black gate saying "for Frodo" in Return of the King.  
 
In Scourged's I felt the the maddened joy of the cultists in their duel with the sons of Sanguinius.  Their internal thoughts zipping around their god orchestrating the events before them felt exactly how a chaos cultist should think.  I really enjoyed their internal doubts after they had been routed from their ambush point.  When things are going good, they're really good, but when the situation reverses they go from fearful doubt back to resignation that their god truly wanted them to die.  When that daemon engine appeared though was fantastic, the cultists venerating this infernal object as their savior and the will of their god manifest felt right to me.  
 
This was a close call for me, I deliberated for a while, all of the battle scenes were amazing as well.  I pictured them all easily and with great detail.  I again want to make a point that I thought all three of these stories were fantastic, but in the end I choose Carrack's tale.  

The Chapel of the Host

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“I have dispatched Brother Anansi, my lord,” Angra, dark apostle of the Psychopomps, explained with a bow to his liege lord, master Sophusar. “Rest assured that the situation on Neph VI will be swiftly resolved.”

Lord Sophusar watched from his throne as the former master of sanctity rose from his bow, the ebony armour of his former post now decorated with roseate blossoms, painted as if falling, prematurely torn from their tree by a scouring wind. The two locked eyes as the demagogue straightened. One half of his face was the stern patrician features of the marine who had always been at the chapter master’s left hand, the eye a warm brown, while the other half was that of a purple-skinned devil. A temptress with an eye of baleful green. Slain by a Templar reclusiarch as the fallen chapter had fled their homeworld, Angra had been restored by their patron in payment for his myriad sins.

Sophusar nodded and with a flourish of his cloak of skin, Angra about turned and left the throne room.

No sooner had the great doors been closed by his personal bodyguard, the doors themselves embossed with images at once brutal and lascivious, than another of his advisors slithered from the shadows, prostrating himself before the terminator-clad lord. Holusiax, the naga-sorcerer, first blessed of the Psychopomps by the Dark Prince.

 

 

Anansi was but one of his many names, for he had almost as many names as he had guises. He slipped from one to the other with great ease. He boarded a merchantman on Zeun Secundus as an apprentice enginseer and disembarked a pilgrim on Bopidu III. A convict in transit to join the penal legions as he crossed the southern continent, a regimental custodian upon his arrival at the Guard camp and a travelling entertainer as he made his way offworld to Neph VI. No shapeshifter was he, merely a man blessed with the blandest, most forgettable of faces and the most average of appearances. He was neither tall nor short, fat nor thin. A talent for mimicry, a soft, warm voice which had talked him out of death several times, and ten light fingers aided his word.

Everywhere he went he was able to blend in and with ease sought out those who shared his allegiances. Those of the Exalted Fecund: the Imperial sect adopted and corrupted by the Psychopomps upon their return to their homeworld years before, he identified and made use of wherever he found them, no matter what name they went by, for all the branches of that cult knew the name of brother Anansi. A favour here, a favour there, and he was sped on his way.

He even made use of rival cults, feigning fealty and taking care not to delve too deeply lest his true allegiance be tested.

But it was once he arrived on Neph VI that he would face the greatest challenge of his ill-spent life.

 

 

Xestoni Hive was the greatest structure on Neph VI, an amalgam of five smaller hives millennia ago. The five had grown and grown, traffic between them causing the transit tubes which linked them through the ash wastes to thicken and thicken as more thoroughfares were added. Buildings built up along the transitways and soon enough the outskirts of each hive met - the scavvie shanty towns between burned and crushed in the construction which joined the hives. In celebration of this, and to govern the mad throng of Man which teemed in the higher and festered in the lower levels, a central hive was constructed. But like all settlements which are meticulously planned, Xestoni Central was insipid, its artwork too perfect, its culture too dry, whilst that of the five original hives thrived and, to a degree, blended. At a time the fashion of one might be in eminence, the sects of a neighbor and the cuisine of another, only for the tastes of those who could afford such distractions to change and the balance to shift. All the while Xestoni Central was used but for governance and even then only its upper layers, and those who inhabited it sought their entertainment in the surrounding hives – the Crown of Xestoni, as they became known.

But Man, like other parasites, makes use of all that is available to him whether it be planned that way or otherwise, and the lower levels of Central soon became the playground of hive gangs. Techies, Brats, Scavvies, Venators, Muties and more. Areas became live fire training grounds for Arbites, practicing on those who dared venture within the forbidden, stark, staid halls carpeted with dust. In no other hive were the lower levels so clean, so refined. Only here could one wander a cavernous boulevard without brushing shoulders with hundreds of one’s fellows.

One could see for miles.

One could run free.

One could hide their secrets.

One could forge an empire.

 

 

Used by earliest Man, and even his predecessors, likely with which he fought using tools and weapons of this very stone, flint could be as sharp as steel and there was something about its not entirely-even edge, and the lethality of something so naturally found, which made wounds caused by it to be particularly nasty. In an age of chainswords, power arms and thunder hammers, a blade of flint was most uncommon, and the knife wielded by this agent of Chaos was far from mundane despite its primitive appearance. Whilst her quarry had taken a most circuitous route to his destination, this had given her much time to prepare and with a mere cut she parted the veil and stepped onto the surface of Neph VI, and into an ash storm.

 

 

The most common icon used by the Exalted Fecund cult was that of an isosceles triangle, point down, with an ellipse stood vertical in the middle. Sometimes the triangle went under the guise of an Aquila and the ellipse as an all-seeing eye. The variation brother Anansi found upon a chapter house sign in the midlevels of Xestoni Hive replaced the ellipse with a spiral. Tightly woven, it was almost hypnotic.

Clad in pilgrim’s robes once more he pushed his way through the throng of citizenry to approach the hooded, genebulked guardians at the fane quite openly, bowed and made one of the sect’s most recognizable hand gestures, the positioning of his little fingers subtle enough to be recognized by those in the know as indicating he was no mere sheep of the flock.

As taller of the sect guardians looked him up and down he could see the habit-clad man’s face clearer. He was clean shaven, even his scalp. A slight underbite enhanced the brutish look granted by his bulk, yet his gaze was far more penetrating than one might have expected from cult muscle.

“Welcome, brother.”

 

Within, the fane was, to the casual observer, no different to chapels of the many sects of the Imperial Creed which could be found across the Imperium of Man. To the eyes of one initiated into the ways of the Exalted Fecund the hints of the cult’s corruption were there: the common usage of the icons of the masculine and the feminine, often intertwined or combined.

Though his circadian rhythm was not yet fully adjusted to the day/night cycle of Neph VI, he happened to arrive at a most opportune time, for the Chapel of the Host – the name which this branch of the accursed cult went by on Neph VI – was about to hold a mass. Anansi filed into the nave with the rest of the faithful. Neither small nor large, the chapel was modest in size but the artwork upon its walls and the finery hung upon them shewed the support that the sect had. Anansi nodded to himself as he looked about, taking in the faces of the many attending and from that getting an impression of the sect’s influence here. Not yet large enough to push for eminence amongst the sects of the Imperial Cult on the planet, perhaps, but in this hive alone...possible. He would have to meet with the fane’s head priest in order to check these rough, initial estimates. He was never one to rush.

He seated himself on one of the leather-cushioned, steel-studded pews, bowing his head and making the sign of the Exalted Fecund a microsecond after those about him did so. The cult fixer raised his head to find a young priest making his way toward the pulpit, clad in robes of roseate silk which gradually darkened to rich violet as they brushed the flagstones.

 

Anansi lingered after the sermon and the donation bowl had been passed about the sizeable congregation. Either his generous offering had been noticed or the brutish guardian at the door had actually recognized his subtle gesture and notified his superiors, but he was not herded out along with the rest of the citizenry. The sermon itself had been humdrum and caused him to set back his estimates of the Chapel of the Host’s influence. The Dark Prince’s virtues had not been spoken of openly, as he had suspected, yet neither had they been hinted at nor the virtues of the Corpse Emperor been manipulated to any great degree. Most disappointing.

He would have to see about whipping up a little more zeal in that priest.

When he found himself left within the nave, only he, the shorter but larger of the guardians and the priest left, he made his way to follow the preacher through the rear door into the sacristy in order to speak more openly...only to find his way barred once again by the guardian. He had to watch as the young priest disappeared within.

“I would speak with the head priest of this chapel,” Anansi spoke quite evenly, neither commanding nor requesting.

“He has retired within, good sir,” this guardian, different to the one he had spoken to at the door, was a few inches shorter, slightly stooped but a good few pounds larger than his comrade who had returned to the narthex.

Anansi responded with a warm smile, “That was not the head priest. I mean the young man no offence but he has not the fire, the zeal, to command such a large congregation. I fear he may lose some of them, in fact.” He realized he was pushing matters now, but also intended to show he was familiar with the ways of the cult. He reached a hand past the guardian, toward the door handle and the rooms beyond.

“Father Coultor is currently indisposed.” A hand with not fingers but rather three large claws came to rest upon the brass door handle far faster than Anansi’s human limb, and the cult fixer looked from the altered appendage to the guardian attached to it.

“Brother, I see that you are blessed by the Prince!” Anansi exclaimed and moved his already outreaching hand as if to touch the claw, but the guardian withdrew it into his voluminous sleeve.

“There is no need to hide the touch of our lord before me,” Anansi smiled. He touched his left index finger to the inside of his right wrist, activating the Octed electoo otherwise hidden deactivated in his right palm. “You are blessed, brother.”

“As you are evidently not,” came the other’s grunted reply, his beady eyes openly looking the fixer up and down.

“I bask in the jealousy and agony of my lack of favour,” Anansi explained, “though in part I believe the Dark Prince has not touched me physically for I must be the shepherd, walking unseen amongst the unbelievers.”

“Then go forth and seek thy flock,” he was told as he was herded out.

 

He found more Chapels of the Host throughout the other hives of the Crown and though some followed the tenants of the Exalted Fecund more, urging their congregations to jealousy, to ambition, to greed, debauchery and excess, in none was he able to penetrate beyond mass, despite displaying his electoos and knowledge of the sect’s ways – which was far deeper than those who barred his way at every turn. Never had he faced such a response. A part of him wondered if word had come down, from that one with the half face of a devil, and without his knowledge he had been excommunicated. Had he somehow broken with the faith? Had he fallen out of favour with his master? He could think of no trespass he had committed.

 

Days later there was a knock upon the plasteel door of his rented apartment. He had chosen a place in one of the lower civilized levels of the hives, where a new face would not cause too many questions to be asked, but not so rough a neighbourhood that he would have to defend himself. Whilst he relished the inflicting of pain, killing was not to his taste for firstly it brought an end to all – no more pain could be inflicted nor pleasure extracted – and the disposal of bodies was most tiresome. He almost missed the knock for the wails of the wastrel who writhed beneath him. Such delights as this and the male beside her, now unconscious, were easily had in these neighbourhoods.

With a curse at the interruption he put his finger to the lips of his partner and left the bed, drawing the curtains about it and wrapping himself in a robe as he crossed the chamber toward the door, sliding a ring from a pocket and onto his door as he did so. From the sideboard he took up a large combat knife – whilst on many worlds he might have had to make do with a kitchen utensil, easily purchased and unlikely to draw attention, here he had been able to procure the large knife without questions being asked. That it was highly polished chrome rather than a matte blade told him it was likely not for combat but rather for gangs: intimidation rather than actual combat. However, this suited him well enough as he held up the blade before the door’s peephole at such an angle that he could see who stood before his door. As a young cultist he had seen a senior member, decades earlier on Fulcrum, peer through a peep hole only for the Arbites on the other side to shotgun the entire door down, blasting apart both man and door.

It was the shorter of the guardians from the first Chapel of the Host, along with another, hooded man.

Irritated at the interruption, he was nevertheless curious, having been blocked and turned away at every door until now.

 

Aliens.

The Exalted Fecund on Neph VI – or the Chapel of the Host as they referred to themselves – had been infiltrated by aliens. All this and more was revealed to him. How the cult’s ways meshed with those of these aliens – or hybrids as they explained many of them were – and how they had forged an alliance with the corrupt priests on Neph VI. Their revealing all this to him sent icewater through his veins, for what they told him was not merely for his edification, to answer his questions, nor was it truly an offer of friendship – though that was how they presented it – it was clear to him that they meant to threaten him.

See all we have done, see how easily we have subverted your people. Bend your knee to our will or perish.

 

 

Clad in a bodysuit which gleamed blue or green depending upon how the light hit it, its face hidden behind a mask of jade, the lithe figure made its way through the crowds in their dirty and oil-stained daily wear, like some lost partygoer or festival performer. The occasional hands which snaked out to brush its thighs or grope at its flesh found their wrists broken or fingers severed.

And as soon as the figure had appeared in the crowd, it vanished.

 

 

Word filtered down from the higher levels of the hives that alerts were being raised. There was talk of conscription and orders came into manufactorums across the planet for work to turn to the production of machine parts: for ships, for flyers, for tanks and weapons. No one knew who the foe were nor even whether war was expected upon Neph VI itself or if the product of their forges would be shipped offworld. All bent their backs to their lathes, their presses, and deep in the mines beneath the ash wastes, the whips of overseers drove on their charges to greater toil.

 

 

Anansi had seen few aliens. Far fewer than one might have expected of an individual so well travelled. Various beings’ head taken as trophies and the occasional Eldar captive of those blessed enlighteners the Psychopomps, that was all. To behold this four-armed, lilac-skinned monster – for surely it was a monster, was it not? Despite all the faithful had told him as they had lead him here – was both fearsome and magnificent. Dozens upon dozens bowed their bald or shaven heads before it, splaying out their fingers and claws before them, some with two arms each, some three.

Upon the walls was the true symbol of the Chapel of the Host: that of the Exalted Fecund, though now in place of the vertical ellipse was the coiled symbol of this insidious alien cult.

It had been weeks since the cult had taken him into their confidence – a withering part of his mind kept telling him he had to learn all he could about them but the more he struggled to remember, the harder it became. He had to learn about them...to tell his masters...their weaknesses? No...to take their offering to that one with the half-devil face?

He averted his eyes as another and another of the `purestrains` - as he had heard them called – made their way into the chapel. His roaming eyes took in those about him. A mixture of humans like him and the full range of hybrids. Children of the Four-Armed Emperor. Some were familiar to him now: ones he had met in masses across the Crown, some he had socialized with in the Chapel’s gatherings in the greater communities, some he had taught the exquisite ways of the Exalted Fecund and taken his pleasure with. Yet now some of those he had come to know seemed transformed. The fingers of some had grown and hardened into claws. The mouth of another had almost closed, vestigial tentacles beginning to sprout from the limbs like the barbels of certain fishes. What was coming over them? Whilst the blessings of the Dark Prince ignited reverence and jealousy within him, there was something about these mutations which was deeply wrong. Repugnant. Alien.

The magus extolled their faith and urged them on to apotheosis in the coming apocalypse, his voice booming out over the heads of the congregation and the gathered `princes`, while Anansi’s mind both raced and spun. Words of the Exalted Fecund’s hymns came to his lips and his mind settled long enough for him to raise his head as the curtains at the far end of the nave parted and upon a palanquin was carried an obese, old, leather-skinned version of the virile princes. Their eyes met and his will was destroyed.

 

 

Jinx dumped Anansi’s limp form onto the deck before Holusiax.

“I got Angra’s man out, and barely escaped with my own life.”

“What fate befell Neph VI?”

The assassin shook her head wearily. “Between the Host’s uprising and the battle in orbit overhead, I have no idea.”

The naga sorcerer tapped a finger against the metal prosthesis which replaced his lower face.

“We must know more of these aliens. They are a threat to the cult. A threat to us.”

He looked down at the uncouscious form of the cult fixer.

“Take him to Podalir. To the Infernal Engine. I would know all that he knows.”

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I thank you for your entries in Inspirational Friday: The Primordial Annihilator versus the Bug over the last week.

I thoroughly enjoyed both Teetengee’s and Carrack’s entries.

Teetengee, yours was an excellent and most welcome return to IF. It’s good to have you back with us.

And Carrack, yours had enough homages to a certain sequel that I couldn’t help but smile as I read it.

I hereby close that topic for the purposes of rewards (though as always if you have more entries on the topic please post them at any time, with a suitable note in the post’s title).

Here begins our twenty ninth challenge of Inspirational Friday 2016:

Aquatic Combat

All too often we write about our renegades and traitors fighting the Long War on the ground or, occasionally, in the void of space. I’d like to see how things go when we put the protagonists into some more varied/extreme environs. Inspired by the fact that the majority of our characters are `marines`...let’s get ‘em wet.

The theme for this week’s Inspiration Friday is Aquatic Combat. In it or on it.

If popular/interesting then we’ll see about some other environments in the future.

Inspirational Friday: Aquatic Combat runs until the 7th of October.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: Carrack.

To the chosen victor: step forward and claim your Octed Amulet:

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Here are my thoughts on last week's IF.

 

Teetengee. You capture what a cult is better than most do. Your writing described how cults of different gods interacted with each other, and the cults went well beyond the typical disgruntled underhivers following the lies of a manipulative cult magos, that we usually see. The customs of the Moot, and the race to get there struck me as original, and ritually significant, the way cults should be. When the Cult of the True Flesh revealed themselves, and suffered the consequences of doing so, they reacted like a cult, looking to bring on the "Angels of the Void", in essence, seeking divine intervention of a sort.

 

You also showed corruption and the responses to it. All the participants at the Moot were corrupted by chaos, but the Cult of the True Flesh, were further corrupted by the alien. The other cults, corrupted by chaos, would not stand for this. I think this added layers to the story.

 

My story. I must admit, I've never played a game against nids, read their codex, or read much of anything about them. I had seen two movies, sequels, about their inspiration a few times, maybe more than a few times. Searching the wiki sites for better knowledge on the bugs didn't appeal to me this week, so I went with the movies. I tried to do this humorously, but I think it mostly fell flat. I should have either gone full tilt fan fiction crossover CSM vs Aliens, there is a precedent, or left it out completely.

 

Kierdale. You added depth to the story of the Psychopomps with describing the extent of the cults they have seeded. The little details like the levels of secret hand signs, and what they signify, were excellent touches, as was the unexpected mission failure of the agent.

 

Both of the participants wrote good stories, and I'm unable to come to a decision at the moment, but I will make my choice for who is the winner tomorrow or the next day.

Feeding Katan II

 

Note: this takes place before any other story I've written about the Black Maw.

 

 

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From the Depths

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“Have you ever seen a Capitol Imperialis?”

Ethui shook his head, biting back irritation at his squad leader’s tone, but his irritation showed in how he shifted his weight, checking the chamber of his bolter yet again. He did not take waiting well, nor being corrected or questioned. Leustri however was leader by dint of arms. Strength. Heads taken. And thus Ethui knew his place.

A Capitol Imperialis was more than a superheavy tank. It was fifty meters in height with a mass rivalling that of battle titans. It was said that four Leman Russ tanks could fit in the barrel of its Behemoth cannon and two full companies of Imperial Guard could be carried within the vehicle, which was more than a mobile bunker and more a slow, crawling fortress. The firepower one carried was pause for thought.

“The Gunakadeit is bigger. And has no trouble at all diving down and traversing the ocean bed. That’s what it was built for. And it’s armed for dealing with the kind of predators you get at such depths. They,” sergeant Leustri pointed a finger at the Golberg mining clan, “screwed up and the mission is off.”

“Not entirely,” Holusiax pushed past Leustri. The chief sorcerer of the Psychopomps, he was the first of the fallen chapter to have been touched by the Dark Prince, his torn body reknit and, from the waist down, his body resembled that of a roseate-skinned serpent. He lead this small band of the chapter on this mission. “Let me speak with them.”

The assembled score of Psychopomps: havocs, raptors and death-knell noise marines amongst them, parted to allow the senior marine through.

Behind him trailed a short mortal in a bodysuit which shone like oil on water, a mask of jade upon her face. Perhaps one of the sorcerer’s thralls Leustri mused, she having been given the mask of a daemonette. He put the mortal from his mind.

“About what? Are they going all the way down there to get the squats up?!”

Holusiax did not stop slithering across toward the human group, but looked back over his shoulder.

“In a manner of speaking, Leustri. In a manner of speaking.”

 

When one was unable to bring one’s rival to their knees alone, it was human nature to call upon others: the enemy of one’s enemy is one’s ally. And in cases when that foe had no other foes, or none who would join your banner, you called upon mercenaries: those who would fight any fight for the right price. And at this time the Psychopomps had answered such a call. The offers of the Golberg mining guild were answered not by a band of guns for hire as they had hoped, but by a chapter of fallen astartes. And the price they would demand would be far higher than the clan was willing to pay.

 

Upon a pontoon platform, a mooring site for smaller watercraft just large enough for the renegades’ thunderhawk to set down upon, the Psychopomps had met their guild `customers`. Water lapped at the sides of the buoyancy tanks and there was no dry land in sight. Before them stood arrayed a band of the Golberg guild, including its head.

“We risked much coming here, lord Golberg,” Holusiax circled the clan head, the human’s black robes both rich – far more expensive than the overalls of his workers – and symbolic: that he had toiled to earn his position of power, his once white coveralls having become as black as night by dint of work. In truth that was how the clan had operated, in millennia past. But, as often occurred in human history, a dynasty had set itself up and was unwilling to lay down power again. He looked from the clan head to the rest of the mining guild members: from bodyguards and scribes to those who usually spent endless hours hewing at rockfaces. Amongst their numbers were some far shorter than mainstream Man, though not as short as their quarry: the squats who now lurked at the bottom of the ocean.

The hearthworlds of the homo sapiens rotundus had been devastated by the Great Devourer before the Stygian Guard had become the Psychopomps, so Holusiax knew that small bands of refugees had made it to Imperial worlds. One such group of runts had made it here to the archipelagos and deep oceans of Sylus V. Impressing the mechanicus-sponsored guilds they had earned their keep. He looked openly at some of the hybrids: had the guilds tried to save the genetically-doomed dwarves, or had it been an attempt to breed them out?

Either way, the Golberg guild had come to a position of power and wanted it all. Only the squats and their goliath hearth-engine Gunakadeit stood in their way.

The guild had shown their hand too early, and the squats had fled to the ocean bed.

Upon the Psychopomps’ arrival lord Golberg had soon released he had called upon forces he could not control, and hoped to get rid of them as soon as possible. There was also the fact that his mechanicus superiors would be arriving within the month and he wanted a clean house before then.

Thus the clock was ticking.

Holusiax had half a mind to abandon the guildlord, let the priests of Mars come, the squats tell their tales and Golberg get his just deserts...but greed overtook spite.

The guildlord shook under the sorcerer’s gaze despite his best efforts.

“You wish to make amends? To aid us in resolving your little problem?”

The man nodded vigorously, keeping his eyes averted.

“Then you have but to grant us fifty of your people, guildlord,” Holusiax looked about, judging the number of guild members present. Just enough.

“Wh-what do you intend to do with th-them?”

He ignored the lack of a title in addressing him. “I shall bless them with my sorceries,” he spoke as a parent to a child, “And they shall raise up that great submarine botheration for us.”

The man spluttered in disbelief but the sorcerer, a good two heads taller than he, laid a heavy hand upon his shoulder and he merely nodded.

At that Holusiax moved about the assembled guards, staff and miners, dark words flowing from his mouth, worlds first spoken eons ago by tongues which were never born. Before him his marine hands were pressed tightly together as if in prayer, whilst his lower pair of slender, daemonic hands carved out gestures in the air before him. Each human shrank back as he approached them, looks of relief appearing on their faces as he moved on once more, though each shivered as if their graves had been stepped over, their very souls had been caressed.

Finally he returned to the guildlord’s side, but looked past him to Leustri and the assembled Psychopomps.

“Slaughter them.”

Autocannon rounds designed for punching through armoured plate tore limbs from bodies, bolts punched into guild guard before exploding them from within and even those who managed to run for cover could not escape, for the sonic weapons of the Death Knell cast forth destructive waves which lapped around any form of cover that was strong enough to resist shattering as it resonated madly.

The majority of the bodies fell into the water and the Psychopomps pitched in those who had died on the deck too. The occasional shot finished off those who had made it into the water and were feebly attempting to swim away.

Holusiax watched as the last of the corpses sank beneath the surface, and smiled before opening a channel to their cruiser in orbit overhead.

“Locate Gunakadeit via deep scans. In one hour, teleport Ustach’s squad to that location.”

 

 

 

Fifty bodies drifted in the water, slowly sinking. Corpses generally returned to the surface once putrefaction caused a buildup of gases within the body, but the firepower unleashed upon them had perforated them so much that none would see the light again.

And the blood. Pint upon pint of it leaked from the bodies as they sank, soon attracting the kinds of carnivorous predators which were common to most oceanic worlds. Vast muscular forms cutting through the water like blades, they were drawn to the bloodshed. Whilst a lone body washed overboard would cause the predators to fight each other over the morsel, here before them was a veritable banquet.

One opened its vast, saw-toothed maw as it cruised toward the lowest of the bodies, only for the body to jerk as the predator’s jaws closed about it. The body thrashed as if waking from a bad dream. The pale pink flesh of Man fell away from the `corpse` like a reptile moulting, to reveal lilac skin beneath. The predator, incapable of processing the sudden live within its dinner of carrion, panicked. But it could not escape, and as it opened its great jaws to release its now unwanted meal, that very morsel struck out, a clawed hand punching up through the predator’s palate and into its brain.

And all about, unlife was seeping into the other corpses, the taint of the warp prayers said over them now twisting their bodies. Some sprouted claws, others tentacles, some even additional pairs of arms and legs.

Once the blood of the predator pack had been added to that of the sacrifices, fifty of the neverborn swam, their bodies undulating with a grace no living creature could match, swam deeper and deeper into the dark depths.

 

 

The squats of Gunakadeit had been away from the hearthworlds when the Great Devourer had descended upon their homes. Completing a contract for the Imperium, they had arrived home in their great longships with holds full of ore and goods only to find their homeworlds barren of life. Stripped completely bare of all biological matter. Earthless, airless. Many relics they managed to recover, for such metals were worthless to those who birthed living weapons from their own flesh. And so they had fled the graveyard of their race, the loss of their living ancestors, their culture...their very futures, heavy on their minds and hearts, for they were too few for their race to continue.

Here on Sylus V they had found work to distract themselves, but their skill had made those who took them in jealous, and it was the shrewdness of their most senior members which sniffed out the coming betrayal, allowing them to take their great mining submersible to the safety of the depths. No vehicle of the guild, nor any known vessel of the Mechanicus, could plumb such deeps.

Yet those agents dispatched by the naga sorcerer needed not they oxygen which was as a clock ticking for the fugitive squats, nor did they feel the tremendous crushing pressure of the ocean floor. Likewise they evaded the colossal weapons of the panicked defenders of Gunakadeit with great ease.

Alarum rang out through the fortress-like mining vessel as airlocks were breached and screeching, wailing monstrosities poured in. Many pranced and capered, vividly coloured locks trailing in their wake as they charged at the shaken dwarves behind their hastily erected barricades. Some scuttled on eight spindly legs, emitting wailing songs which paralysed every mortal who heard them.

 

 

Holusiax, Leustri, Ethui and the other Psychopomps observed the series of bubbles which broke upon the water’s surface, indicative of the sudden, unnatural displacement of matter so far below.

 

 

“MOVE!” Ustach roared over the comm to his squad as soon as they materialized and the great weight of their armour began pulling them toward the ocean floor. Terminator armour was vac-proof – not so different from the conditions they now found themselves in – but he wanted to be inside, in combat, and out of the firearcs of those great cannons as soon as possible.

 

Combi-bolters and heavy flamers swept back and forth as the terminator squad moved rapidly through the low corridors of Gunakadeit, often knocking down vents and pipes from the ceiling as the tops of their suits struck them. The squat vessel was designed for squats. Onward they advanced toward the bridge, but not a single shot was fired.

They felt no surprise, for they had been informed of the sorcerer’s plans and even had they not been, they recognized the butchery performed by the daughters of Slaanesh. The diminutive abhumans had been torn limb from limb. Heads snipped from shoulders. Some had been cocooned by the arachnid daemons, to what purpose the Psychopomp terminators did not spare a thought.

As quickly as they had swept through the great vessel the daemons had, it appeared, departed, perhaps having soon bored of toying with the short corpses which carpeted the chambers and gangways.

Ustach’s squad did feel disappointment, that they had been denied even a single kill, but put this aside as they found the heads of the bridge crew. Some were not so near to the bodies to which they had been attached, but were eventually located. Only now removing their helmets, squad Ustach gorged themselves on the grey matter of this dying race.

 

 

Some hours later a gargantuan monster of iron and giltwork breached the surface of the ocean sending waves radiating outward for kilometers.

Gunakadeit slowly eased itself alongside the pontoon platform once the undulating water’s surface had settled, and the doors of its great upper holds cranked open.

Ustach stood upon the threshold, half a dozen leathery heads tied to his gunbelt by their beards.

“Vessel secured,” he bowed to the naga sorcerer.

 

 

Hidden Content
While Alien Resurrection was, I'm my opinion, a turd of a film, the image of Aliens swimming stuck with me and inspired this. With more time I'd like to have written a scene with Daemonettes and my spider fiends swimming through flooded areas of the sub, but...we'll see if I can edit it in tomorrow, time permitting.

Into the dark depths

It had been 7 weeks. 7 weeks of journeying through the warp to reach the world of Atlyantia. It had once been a beautiful world ripe with life but a sudden change in the worlds atmosphere combined with tetonic shifts in the planets crust, had seem the world go from a jewel of the imperium to a under water world. Zai sighed, it annoyed him that the Plague Lord had picked his squad of plague marines for this campaign. They weren't going in alone of course they were one of seven squads of plague marines chosen alongside 7 squads of terminators chosen to lead the assault. What they were looking for however was unknown, and he didn't like it he might be a son of mortarion and champion of Nurgle but he wasn't stupid.

 

"Sir" came a voice over the vox. It belonged to the squads plasma gunner Jimmy. "Report" said Zai. "It seems that this world will test us to our limit" said Jimmy. "Ha good its been a while since we had a challenge" said Zai. "Aye it has sir however im curious why is the lord chucking so many of his veteran company terminators alongside us the warriors of the 7th company" said Jimmy rather sheepishly. "Because the commander wishes for this attack to be quick, we are only here to retrieve a artefact that's all" said Zai clearly irritated. With that no more was said.

 

4 hours later they finally landed in the ocean and the battle began. Rhinos were not suitable in this environment so the warriors of the chapter were being deployed on foot, something which made the warriors of the 7th company un nervous for they were used to mechanised warfare. As the battle began the first wave of defenders swam out lasguns and other weapons raised to fire on the plague marines. "For the plague lord and for the grandfather" shouted the Plague marines raising their bolters and plasma weapons firing shot after shot into the defenders bolters exploding bodies while plasma burnt holes through the defenders.

 

Forced to fall back the defenders withdrew to the underwater citadel they had come out of. Raising both bolt pistol and plague knifes the plague marines charged slamming melta bombs onto the citadel doors allowing them to break in and it was here were the plague marines slaughtered the defenders plague knifes rotting the flesh of their victims while the plague marines were themselves immune to the toxins. Within 90 minutes the cities outer wall had fallen and it would only take another 3 hours for the rest to fall.

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I thank you for your entries in Inspirational Friday: Aquatic Warfare over the last week.

Carrack - Feeding Katan II. This was just the kind of thing I was hoping for when I thought up the idea of last week’s IF challenge. How marines would adapt their combat tactics to underwater environments and conditions.

The bit about the bolter rounds specifically made for underwater combat was excellent (and Casper’s causing the enemy’s bolt to detonate within the barrel).

The Darkprincesnun - Into the dark depths. I liked the build-up, and the explanation of how the planet had become oceanic, but in my opinion a little more time taken in describing events would have helped a lot. I couldn’t be sure if the combat took place under the water or above it... The idea of a plasma gun being fired under water immediately makes one wonder what kind of trouble that might be for the gunner (even if it doesn’t overheat)! How the water effects plague marines...as soon as they enter the water a cloud of filth/mire spreads out about them? You could have a summoned legion of plaguebearers or zombies traipsing across the ocean floor...

I hereby close that topic for the purposes of rewards (though as always if you have more entries on the topic please post them at any time, with a suitable note in the post’s title).

Here begins our thirtieth challenge of Inspirational Friday 2016:

Campaign III – Tables Turn / The Crucible

In Part One part one we wrote about the preparation and opening moves of a Chaos force against their chosen foe. In Part Two we detailed the initial assault, and now we come to all out warfare! The 30th challenge of IF2016 has a double title as you can choose to focus simply on the battle: `Crucible`, or have the battle take an unexpected twist: `Tables Turn`.

Either way, things should set up the campaign for the fourth and final part: Campaign IV: Climax. Coming before the end of 2016...

To those who did not enter part one and two: by all means submit three entries biggrin.png...or at the other end of the scale just submit part three...or give us a summary of what happened in the buildup to this battle and cover the battle itself in detail.

Inspirational Friday: Campaign III – Tables Turn / The Crucible runs until the 21st of October.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: Teetengee.

To the chosen victor: step forward and claim your Octed Amulet:

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And I’ll finish with a call for suggestions.

I still have lots of IF themes on my list (I did start writing out the list to post here, then thought better of it. If I show you the themes now some of you might start writing now and the poor judge would end up with several novella to read that week msn-wink.gif ) but more are always welcome.

The Shield

Aspis, Subsector Seat

 

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Aspis Eternal

 

 

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Carrack, seemed a bit short, though I liked the kinship concept.

Darkprincesnum: I feel it could be expanded upon, this felt more like an overview at times.

Kierdale: I felt that some parts of it could have used some more revision, it seemed scattered. However, the ideas of the ritual, the water daemons, and the Gunakadeit I found quite interesting. You win this round.

Preparations

 

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I'm going to update this with parts 2 and three as they come, I'm also not done with part one so take it as a wip if you read it

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